•  183
    Philosophical autobiography
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 45 (3). 2002.
    An examination of the genre of philosophical autobiography sheds light on the role of personal judgment alongside objective rationality in philosophy. Building on Monk's conception of philosophical biography, philosophical autobiography can be seen as any autobiography that reveals some interplay between life and thought. It is argued that almost all autobiographies by philosophers are philosophical because the recounting of one's own life is almost invariably a form of extended speech act of se…Read more
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    Free Inquiry 27 41-44. 2007.
  •  105
    Too Good Just for Beginners (review)
    The Philosophers' Magazine 2 (2): 52-52. 1998.
  •  81
    Floated on the ideas market
    The Philosophers' Magazine 49 75-76. 2010.
    “I would go into a lunch of stockbrokers who would be coming to listen to the business philosopher, and I felt so nervous because I thought I was supposed to tell them where they should be putting their clients’ money on the basis of my knowledge of the history of ideas. I felt such a failure because I didn’t know what they should do with their clients’ funds.”
  •  62
    Video killed the intro book star
    The Philosophers' Magazine 28 78-79. 2004.
  •  69
    Ten British landmarks
    The Philosophers' Magazine 18 (18): 39-40. 2002.
  •  56
    Degrees of concern
    The Philosophers' Magazine 23 38-39. 2003.
  •  68
    The strangest things
    The Philosophers' Magazine 34 73-75. 2006.
  •  178
    Michael Martin (ed.) The cambridge companion to atheism
    Religious Studies 44 (3): 367-371. 2008.
  •  132
    Britain’s best-loved dope dealer
    with Howard Marks
    The Philosophers' Magazine 54 (54): 121-126. 2011.
    “His hypothesis is that if you take dope you’re going to end up taking smack, but he’d actually got an incorrect application of Bayes’ theorem... the gateway theory, all obviously complete bollocks, based on a professor’s ineptitude in statistics.”
  •  130
    Simon says
    The Philosophers' Magazine 15 37-39. 2001.
  •  75
    Claiming Darwin for the Left
    The Philosophers' Magazine 4 43-45. 1998.
  •  63
    The punters’ verdicts
    The Philosophers' Magazine 43 (43): 99-101. 2008.
  •  65
    Less is more
    The Philosophers' Magazine 16 3-3. 2001.
  •  55
    When they grew up
    The Philosophers' Magazine 24 44-44. 2003.
  •  81
    Readers of the lost scrolls
    The Philosophers' Magazine 18 11-12. 2002.
  •  71
    Bringing the grey to life
    The Philosophers' Magazine 34 76-78. 2006.
  •  106
    The pleasures of the table
    The Philosophers' Magazine 65 (65): 68-74. 2014.
  •  50
    Getting social
    The Philosophers' Magazine 14 3-3. 2001.
  •  76
    Portentous? Nous?
    The Philosophers' Magazine 26 12-13. 2004.
  •  106
    All in the Mind
    The Philosophers' Magazine 12 42-43. 2000.
  •  96
    The long road to equality
    The Philosophers' Magazine 53 14-19. 2011.
    You can't go through a graduate programme in other humanities subjects and be considered competent in those fields unless you've done some work on gender and race issues. Feminist work is mainstream. In philosophy that's just not true. You could go through a philosophy degree to this day and never have a class by a woman, never have to encounter anything having to do with feminism or gender or race.
  •  70
    Free to choose
    The Philosophers' Magazine 11 37-40. 2000.
  •  564
    What is the meaning of life? It is a question that has intrigued the great philosophers--and has been hilariously lampooned by Monty Python. Indeed, the whole idea strikes many of us as vaguely pompous, a little absurd. Is there one profound and mysterious meaning to life, a single ultimate purpose behind human existence? In What's It All About?, Julian Baggini says no, there is no single meaning. Instead, Baggini argues meaning can be found in a variety of ways, in this life. He succinctly brea…Read more
  •  34
    _An urgent defense of reason, the essential method for resolving—or even discussing—divisive issues_ Reason, long held as the highest human achievement, is under siege. According to Aristotle, the capacity for reason sets us apart from other animals, yet today it has ceased to be a universally admired faculty. Rationality and reason have become political, disputed concepts, subject to easy dismissal. Julian Baggini argues eloquently that we must recover our reason and reassess its proper place, …Read more
  •  142
    Everything for everyone
    The Philosophers' Magazine 8 52-52. 1999.
  •  140
    The wisdom of not knowing
    The Philosophers' Magazine 37 36-45. 2007.
  •  72
    Silent witness
    The Philosophers' Magazine 39 17-19. 2007.
  •  111
    Darwin and Ethics
    The Philosophers' Magazine 4 49-49. 1998.